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Costa Rica, Panama, and Nicaragua: explaining economic success levelsNegy, Kevin 01 May 2013 (has links)
Latin America is a region that has deep roots in Spanish colonialism. Since its independence, many countries in the region have heavily depended on agriculture exports to industrialized states to support their economies. This has led to political theorists to label Latin America as an area full of "periphery" countries that are exploited for resources by "core countries. Costa Rica, Panama, and Nicaragua were not the exception. In recent years, however, a noticeable difference between the economies of the countries has helped Costa Rica and Panama become more successful than Nicaragua, on the basis of GDP, GNI, and other similar measures. This thesis attempts to explain this economic difference by analyzing what type of relationship the three countries have had with the United States (which has acted as a regional hegemon) and analyzing how each country has handled economic dependence on agriculture. Through this comparative case study, the thesis tries to add to development and dependency theory literature.
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Inter-American Cooperation through United States Programs for Cultural UnderstandingPierce, Alfred C. 01 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to examine and discuss the efforts and arrangements made by the United States to promote cultural understanding in the American hemisphere.
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21st century foresightPopper, Rafael January 2011 (has links)
21st Century Foresight offers a comprehensive study of ‘foresight’ as an instrument of policy. It covers the development of foresight methodology, the design of foresight activities and their evaluation. The thesis is based on eleven publications collectively making significant contributions to knowledge about global foresight practices and applications in different domains (i.e. research areas and socio-economic sectors). New conceptual frameworks developed include the Foresight Diamond, the SMART Futures Jigsaw and the Methods Combination Matrix (MCM), which can be used as tools for futures research, practical work in the design and management of forward-looking activities and knowledge transfer on foresight. The thesis shows both generalised and specific contributions to knowledge. The former is best demonstrated with the development of a “fully-fledged evaluation” framework with twenty criteria, the identification of critical factors influencing the selection of foresight methods (e.g. geo-R&D context) and the use of network analysis techniques in foresight. The latter is prominent throughout the thesis with examples including the results of particular evaluations and the profiles of foresight practices in Europe and Latin America. A prevailing theme is the use of mapping and benchmarking approaches to evaluate foresight practices and reveal a more detailed understanding of the impacts of foresight in science, technology and innovation systems. The theoretical contributions (e.g. using exploratory research and catastrophe theory) are complemented with a set of practical instruments providing methodological basis and guidelines for increasing the efficiency and outcome of foresight and horizon scanning activities. Overall, the thesis demonstrates original contributions to five distinct yet interconnected areas of knowledge: foresight methodology; foresight practices in Europe and the world; foresight in Latin America; foresight evaluation; and the evaluation of national technology foresight programmes. The various approaches used to frame the morphology of foresight – supported with evidence, comparisons and evaluations – are the main contributions to knowledge.
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La institucionalización del rol materno durante gobiernos Autoritarios : respuestas de escritoras argentinas y brasileñas a la construcción patriarcal de género y naciónArce, Emilia Isabel 01 June 2010 (has links)
Women’s fictional narratives, besides influencing the process of nation building, also
served to redefine the feminine gender and its incontrovertible contribution to the
processes involved in imagining their communities. Although the systematic oppression
suffered by women was effective, there were women writers who through negotiation
gained access to male-dominated circles and achieved recognition. These women had a
fundamental role in defying the stratification of gender in their society. They opposed
every limitation imposed upon their gender, particularly the construction of the maternal
role from a patriarchal perspective. In the works selected for this analysis, the authors
reject the institutionalization of motherhood using as a narrative device motherless
heroines who redefine femininity in their own terms and defy the patriarchal construct that confines motherhood to the seclusion of the home. Written in times of political
upheaval, these novels emphasize the importance of women’s participation in the public
sphere.
In this dissertation I analyze four novels situated in or written during authoritarian
regimes. The introduction provides the theoretical framework in which the definition of
gender is discussed as well as the process of nation building in Latin America. I also
include critical views on the topic of motherhood as women writers struggle with the
representation of the maternal role and its implications in the construction of gender. In
chapter one I discuss Argentinean writer Juana Manuela Gorriti’s La hija del
mashorquero (1865); the second chapter analyzes Brazilian novelist Julia Lópes de
Almeida’s A familia Medeiros (1892); chapter three is dedicated to the study of
Argentinean Elvira Orpheé’s Uno (1961); the fourth chapter analyzes Brazilian Lygia
Fagundes Telles’s As meninas (1973), so as to outline periods in which the patriarchal
discourse concerning the role of women in society revolved around the traditional
concepts of femininity and to reveal the insistence of women to obviate such concepts,
specifically in terms of nation building. Through the detailed textual analysis of these
novels, I aim to demonstrate the strategies used by these authors to openly defy the
constructions of femininity through their critique of the socio-political systems of their
times. / text
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Political writing in times of crisis : the work of Octavio Paz, Carlos Fuentes, Carlos Monsivais and Elena Poniatowska, Mexico, 1968-1995Brewster, Claire January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Somoza and the United States : good neighbour diplomacy in Nicaragua, 1933-1945Crawley, Andrew January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Growing old in Sao Paulo, Brazil : assessment of health status and family support of the elderly of different socio-economic strata living in the communityRamos, Luiz Roberto January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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A partnership of equals? : a study of academic collaboration between Britain and BrazilCanto, Maria Isabel Lessa da Cunha January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Prices and price-cost margins in the post 1990 Brazilian trade liberalizationIglesias, Roberto Magno January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Auto-biographing Caribbeanness : re-imagining diasporic nation and identityPierre, Hazel A. January 2007 (has links)
This thesis undertakes a multidisciplinary study of the construction of nation and identity in the context of the Caribbean and its diaspora in Britain. Taking Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana and Britain as the countries for comparative analysis two primary research questions are addressed: How can Caribbean nation and identity be re-conceptualised to represent its complex, heterogeneous societies? How have Caribbean identities resisted, metamorphosed and been re-constituted in the diasporic context of Britain? While current scholarship on nation and identity is interrogated, the principle guiding the methodology has been to engage with the specificities of the region's history and culture with a view to arriving at new interpretations that reflect the contemporary Caribbean situation. It is argued that Caribbean auto-biographical practice, prevalent in much of its artistic production, provides a conceptual tool for interpreting the Caribbean nation. As a site of resistance to received knowledges, Caribbean autolbiography has facilitated inter alia the re-inscription of histories and the imagining of nation spaces. Since as a genre it IS inherently democratic, multiple imaginings of nation emerge and coalesce from the wider range of voices accommodated by auto-biographical practice. The prismatic creolisation model is proposed as a re-visioning of Caribbean identity. This model modifies and augments Kamau Brathwaite's creolisation thesis with relevant scholarship from Stuart Hall and the artistic philosophy of the painter Dunstan St Orner, Prismism. Prismatic creolisation suggests a polycentric, more inclusive perspective from which Caribbean identity, culture and language might be interpreted. These theoretical tools - auto-biographical practice and prismatic creolisation - are applied to the examination of how Caribbean identity and culture are translated and re-constructed in the diaspora situation. The Windrush generation, it is argued, began negotiating Britishness by auto-biographing Caribbean transitional identities into the national imagination. Succeeding generations have been renegotiating these terms by creating new cultural forms and ways ofbeing that resist and inflect Britishness.
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